Data di Pubblicazione:
2015
Abstract:
Recent air quality regulations (Directive 2008/50/EC) enforce the transition from point-based monitoring networks
to new tools that must be capable of mapping and forecasting air quality on the totality of land area, and therefore
the totality of citizens. This implies new technologies such as models and additional indicative measurements,
are needed in addition to accurate fixed air quality monitoring stations, that until now have been taken as
reference by local administrators for the enforcement of various mitigation strategies. However, due to their
sporadic spatial distribution, they cannot describe the highly resolved spatial pollutant variations within cities.
Integrating additional indicative measurements may provide adequate information on the spatial distribution
of the ambient air quality, also allowing for a reduction of the required minimum number of fixed sampling
points, whose high cost and complex maintenance still remain a crucial concern for local administrators. New
low-cost and small size sensors are becoming available, that could be employed in air quality monitoring including
mobile applications. However, accurate assessment of their accuracy and performance both in controlled and
real monitoring conditions is crucially needed. Quantifying sensor response is a significant challenge due to
the sensitivity to ambient temperature and humidity and the cross-sensitivity to others pollutant species. This
study reports the development of an Arduino compatible electronic board (AIRQino) which integrates a series
of low-cost metal oxide and NDIR sensors for air quality monitoring, with sensors to measure air temperature,
relative humidity, noise, solar radiation and vertical acceleration. A comparative assessment was made for CO2,
CO, NO2, CH4, O3, VOCs concentrations, temperature and relative humidity. A controlled climatic chamber study
(-80oC / +80oC) was performed to verify temperature and humidity interference using reference gas cylinders and
high quality reference sensors. The AIRQino was installed on mobile vectors such as bikes, buses and trams in
the cities of Firenze and Siracusa (Italy), that send data real-time to a Web portal. By integrating a microprocessor
unit it is capable of directly updating calibration coefficients to provide corrected sensor output as digital string
through RS232 serial port. Results from the lab tests and the 'real world' mobile applications are presented and
discussed, to assess to what extent this sensor technology might be useful for the development of portable, compact, wireless and cost-effective system for air quality monitoring in urban areas at high spatio-temporal resolution.
Tipologia CRIS:
04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
air quality; low cost sensors
Elenco autori:
DI LONARDO, Sara; Zaldei, Alessandro; Gualtieri, Giovanni; Gioli, Beniamino; Matese, Alessandro; Toscano, Piero; Martelli, Francesca; Vagnoli, Carolina
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